EP0472700B1 - Switch for multiplexes - Google Patents

Switch for multiplexes Download PDF

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Publication number
EP0472700B1
EP0472700B1 EP91906166A EP91906166A EP0472700B1 EP 0472700 B1 EP0472700 B1 EP 0472700B1 EP 91906166 A EP91906166 A EP 91906166A EP 91906166 A EP91906166 A EP 91906166A EP 0472700 B1 EP0472700 B1 EP 0472700B1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
drop
add
multiplex
capacity
traffic
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Revoked
Application number
EP91906166A
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German (de)
French (fr)
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EP0472700A1 (en
Inventor
Stephen Patrick Ferguson
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GPT Ltd
Plessey Telecommunications Ltd
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GPT Ltd
Plessey Telecommunications Ltd
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Publication of EP0472700A1 publication Critical patent/EP0472700A1/en
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04JMULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
    • H04J3/00Time-division multiplex systems
    • H04J3/02Details
    • H04J3/08Intermediate station arrangements, e.g. for branching, for tapping-off

Definitions

  • This invention relates to an improvement in add-drop multiplexes, also known in Europe as drop-and-insert multiplexes.
  • Such multiplexes are a particular form of combined multiplexer/demultiplexer for digital signals, optimised for the low cost insertion or extraction of a proportion of the "through" traffic capacity of the multiplex.
  • a digital multiplex combines multiple digital signal streams into a composite stream of digits, each of the digits in the original streams conventionally being allocated to a unique time slot in the frame structure of the composite stream.
  • the demultiplexer separates the multiple signals so as to restore them to their original form.
  • add-drop multiplexes It is gradually becoming a common feature of add-drop multiplexes that they incorporate a matrix switch.
  • This switch has the ability to control the routing of traffic in small increments, each of which is a small fraction of the total traffic passing through the multiplex.
  • An example of this is disclosed in the article 'Experimental Broad Band Drop/Insert/Cross-Connect System' published in the proceedings of the IEEE Global Telecommunication Conference & Exhibition, Nov/Dec 1988.
  • the switch has a correspondingly high complexity, because of the large number of such increments to be manipulated, and this invention relates to a proposed simplification of the switch.
  • the present invention provides an add-drop multiplex comprising a matrix switch in which the add/drop functions of the multiplexer occur, a pair of time slot assignment function circuits connected to the drop-side of the matrix switch by at least one bus capable of relieving the load on the matrix switch and of transferring traffic in one direction only from the add to the drop function circuits and of relieving the load on the matrix switch.
  • Figure 1 shows how an add-drop multiplex is conventionally arranged.
  • Figure 1 shows the basic function of an add-drop multiplex.
  • the traffic is demultiplexed at the terminal multiplexes 1 and 2 and sent between the multiplexes via wire links 3.
  • the traffic can pass between the multiplexes untouched or can be routed so that it involves the expense of two full terminal multiplexes and requires manual arrangement of the cables each time there is to be a change in routing of any component of the traffic.
  • FIG. 2 of the drawings this shows a conventional add-drop multiplex system where routing flexibility is given by an interchange or matrix switch 5.
  • Optical fibre lines are shown at 6 along with associated optical terminals 7.
  • the output tributaries carrying data to be dropped or added are shown at 8.
  • Combining the full functions of (a) and (b) allows the management of bandwidth in a chain of add-drop multiplexes. This is intended to be done by opening up a gap in the traffic, freeing an associated group of timeslots by transferring their previous contents to other timeslots, a process referred to as "repacking". As a result, the later insertion of a wideband data channel becomes possible.
  • a wideband channel is conventionally specified so that it must occupy such an associated group of timeslots, rather than being spread piecemeal in a manner similar to that commonly associated with the writing of data to a partially filled computer disc drive.
  • Item (c) is not normally required of an add-drop multiplex, this aspect of network flexibility being conventionally restricted to cross-connects, which have a much larger traffic capacity than is normal in an add-drop multiplex. This restriction is because at such a facility there is a much smaller probability of the wanted path being unavailable because of being already occupied.
  • Item (d) is illustrated in Figure 3, which shows two types of add-drop multiplex; these are slave and ring master multiplexes 20, 21.
  • the ring master connects a ring or chain of add-drop multiplexes to the network, and provides the gateway for management control and for network timing to support the operation of the add-drop multiplexes.
  • the remaining multiplexes are slave ones.
  • an add-drop port capacity on the link side is by definition equal to the capacity of the add-drop multiplex.
  • the capacity on the drop side is conventionally asymptotic to the same value, although facilities to access the full capacity are commonly not fitted.
  • the ring master 21 has 4 full capacity ports and each slave 20 has 3. This arises because the ring master has two different streams of "through" traffic, one for each side of the ring, while the slave has only one. In practice a proportion of the through traffic of the ring master may be passed along the ring rather than being accessed by the network as shown in figure 3.
  • the drop-side port may take the physical form of a number of relatively low capacity tributaries.
  • these ports may also take the form of a pair of high capacity (i.e. high bit rate) physical ports, as implied in figure 3.
  • the ring master has no capacity to spare to support a number of locally arising circuits, i.e. it cannot provide the same function as the slave multiplex, whose entire drop-side capacity is dedicated to just this function.
  • switches are commonly constructed from elements with an even number of ports, usually a power of 4, so that large switches can be constructed by a simple inter-connection of a number of such elements.
  • the switching element in an add-drop multiplex should follow this rule also.
  • An uneconomic alternative to providing a fifth port is to use two add-drop multiplexes at the ring master location, one being the ring master and the other being a slave multiplex.
  • a better scheme is to construct a 6-port switch from a pair of 4-port elements inside the same add-drop multiplex, but this is again unattractive because it involves replicating one of the potentially most expensive elements in the add-drop multiplex in order to gain an increase in port capacity, and this increase is then wastefully large.
  • a more economic solution can be provided by taking advantage of a further feature which an add-drop multiplex may be required to provide.
  • This feature is consolidation. It arises because traffic streams accessed on the drop-side ports may be only partially filled with traffic. Since the total drop-side capacity of a slave multiplex is commonly equal to the "through" capacity of the multiplex, any partial filling of the tributaries on the drop side represents lost capacity for access.
  • add-drop multiplexes be fitted with an excess of tributary port capacity, larger possibly than the "through" capacity.
  • the concept is that some internal concentration will be applied so as to pack the through path more efficiently than the partly loaded tributaries, the multiplex selectively accessing only those time slots which are loaded with traffic.
  • the invention lies in providing the interchange or matrix switch with an extra pair of interconnected buses.
  • This is shown in Figure 4.
  • a 4-port matrix switch 30 occupies the position of the switch 5 in Figure 2 and also acts as a ring master.
  • the drop side of switch 30 has buses 31, 32 connected to a pair of respective time slot assignment function circuits 33, 34; there being one time slot assignment function circuit for each direction of traffic.
  • the time slot assignment function circuits each have access to all the drop-side capacity of switch 30 and each of the tributary ports can be allocated a share of the total bus capacity.
  • the new buses are indicated at 35.
  • Each timeslot assignment function now has the ability to allocate capacity on any bus (three for one direction of traffic, three for the other).
  • the purpose of the new buses 35 is to transfer traffic between the add and drop functions, allowing traffic entering or leaving on one tributary, not only to enter or leave via the link side, but alternatively to do so via another tributary. This is a function normally reserved to a cross-connect and considered inappropriate in an add-drop multiplex, as described in paragraph c) earlier in this specification.
  • the extra facility allows possible lower rate tributaries serving local circuits, to be connected either to the "through" path or to the high bit rate tributaries connected to the network, i.e. the facility of a slave multiplex is provided. If not all of the traffic on the link side is to be connected to the network, possibly because it is connected to circulate on the ring, then traffic capacity inherently becomes free on the buses, allowing the local tributaries to access that capacity and connect to the network via the high bit rate tributaries.
  • the described arrangement provides the function of a fifth port, within the inherent capacity limitations of the add-drop multiplex, and with greater economy of circuits and devices than known alternatives.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Use Of Switch Circuits For Exchanges And Methods Of Control Of Multiplex Exchanges (AREA)
  • Time-Division Multiplex Systems (AREA)
  • Data Exchanges In Wide-Area Networks (AREA)
  • Selective Calling Equipment (AREA)
  • Circuits Of Receivers In General (AREA)
  • Alarm Systems (AREA)
  • Small-Scale Networks (AREA)
  • Paper (AREA)
  • Laminated Bodies (AREA)
  • Electronic Switches (AREA)

Abstract

PCT No. PCT/GB91/00396 Sec. 371 Date Nov. 5, 1991 Sec. 102(e) Date Nov. 5, 1991 PCT Filed Mar. 14, 1991 PCT Pub. No. WO91/14318 PCT Pub. Date Sep. 19, 1991.An add/drop multiplex includes a matrix switch, the drop side of which is connected via buses to respective time slot assignment function circuits which are interconnected by at least one bus capable of transferring traffic between the add and the drop functions of the multiplex.

Description

  • This invention relates to an improvement in add-drop multiplexes, also known in Europe as drop-and-insert multiplexes. Such multiplexes are a particular form of combined multiplexer/demultiplexer for digital signals, optimised for the low cost insertion or extraction of a proportion of the "through" traffic capacity of the multiplex.
  • A digital multiplex combines multiple digital signal streams into a composite stream of digits, each of the digits in the original streams conventionally being allocated to a unique time slot in the frame structure of the composite stream. Following recognition of the inserted frame start signal at the demuliplexer, the demultiplexer separates the multiple signals so as to restore them to their original form.
  • In a terminal digital multiplex, all of the capacity of the composite stream is accessible in the form of multiple individual streams; by contrast, in an add-drop multiplex this is commonly not the case, and there are other differences which are outlined below.
  • It is gradually becoming a common feature of add-drop multiplexes that they incorporate a matrix switch. This switch has the ability to control the routing of traffic in small increments, each of which is a small fraction of the total traffic passing through the multiplex. An example of this is disclosed in the article 'Experimental Broad Band Drop/Insert/Cross-Connect System' published in the proceedings of the IEEE Global Telecommunication Conference & Exhibition, Nov/Dec 1988.
  • Where this fraction is particularly small, the switch has a correspondingly high complexity, because of the large number of such increments to be manipulated, and this invention relates to a proposed simplification of the switch.
  • Accordingly the present invention provides an add-drop multiplex comprising a matrix switch in which the add/drop functions of the multiplexer occur, a pair of time slot assignment function circuits connected to the drop-side of the matrix switch by at least one bus capable of relieving the load on the matrix switch and of transferring traffic in one direction only from the add to the drop function circuits and of relieving the load on the matrix switch.
  • In order that the present invention may be more readily understood an embodiment thereof will now be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which;
    • Figure 1 a block diagram showing the basic functions of an add-drop multiplex;
    • Figure 2 shows conventional add-drop multiplexes,
    • Figure 3 shows a network incorporating add-drop multiplexes, and
    • Figure 4 is a block diagram of an add-drop multiplex according to the present invention.
  • Referring now to Figure 1 of the drawings, Figure 1 shows how an add-drop multiplex is conventionally arranged.
  • Figure 1 shows the basic function of an add-drop multiplex. In the embodiment shown in this figure the traffic is demultiplexed at the terminal multiplexes 1 and 2 and sent between the multiplexes via wire links 3. In accordance with requirements the traffic can pass between the multiplexes untouched or can be routed so that it involves the expense of two full terminal multiplexes and requires manual arrangement of the cables each time there is to be a change in routing of any component of the traffic.
  • Referring now to Figure 2 of the drawings this shows a conventional add-drop multiplex system where routing flexibility is given by an interchange or matrix switch 5. Optical fibre lines are shown at 6 along with associated optical terminals 7. the output tributaries carrying data to be dropped or added are shown at 8.
  • The functionality of the interchange or matrix switch varies between designs; in particular it can vary in the following parameters:
    • a) the size of the smallest increment of traffic which can be routed, and whether such an increment is fixed in size or is variable in the operation of the multiplex.
    • b) the routing options which are available, e.g. whether the increments can be transferred between timeslots as they pass through the multiplex, or merely be accessed by the add-drop tributary ports (it is not uncommon for selection of the accessible timeslots to be the only degree of routing control which the multiplex offers; where there is no switching function, this control is implemented by physically associating each plug-in card with certain timeslots so that they are accessed automatically if the appropriate card is inserted).
    • c) whether increments of traffic can be selectively sent back in the direction from which they came, possibly in a different timeslot, in line with item (b) above.
    • d) the number of ports on the multiplex which are able to support its full "through" traffic capacity.
  • Combining the full functions of (a) and (b) allows the management of bandwidth in a chain of add-drop multiplexes. This is intended to be done by opening up a gap in the traffic, freeing an associated group of timeslots by transferring their previous contents to other timeslots, a process referred to as "repacking". As a result, the later insertion of a wideband data channel becomes possible. A wideband channel is conventionally specified so that it must occupy such an associated group of timeslots, rather than being spread piecemeal in a manner similar to that commonly associated with the writing of data to a partially filled computer disc drive.
  • Item (c) is not normally required of an add-drop multiplex, this aspect of network flexibility being conventionally restricted to cross-connects, which have a much larger traffic capacity than is normal in an add-drop multiplex. This restriction is because at such a facility there is a much smaller probability of the wanted path being unavailable because of being already occupied.
  • Item (d) is illustrated in Figure 3, which shows two types of add-drop multiplex; these are slave and ring master multiplexes 20, 21. The ring master connects a ring or chain of add-drop multiplexes to the network, and provides the gateway for management control and for network timing to support the operation of the add-drop multiplexes. The remaining multiplexes are slave ones.
  • In an add-drop port capacity on the link side is by definition equal to the capacity of the add-drop multiplex. The capacity on the drop side is conventionally asymptotic to the same value, although facilities to access the full capacity are commonly not fitted.
  • As can be seen in Figure 3, the ring master 21 has 4 full capacity ports and each slave 20 has 3. This arises because the ring master has two different streams of "through" traffic, one for each side of the ring, while the slave has only one. In practice a proportion of the through traffic of the ring master may be passed along the ring rather than being accessed by the network as shown in figure 3.
  • On a slave multiplex, the drop-side port may take the physical form of a number of relatively low capacity tributaries. On a ring master the same may be true but these ports may also take the form of a pair of high capacity (i.e. high bit rate) physical ports, as implied in figure 3.
  • In the latter case the ring master has no capacity to spare to support a number of locally arising circuits, i.e. it cannot provide the same function as the slave multiplex, whose entire drop-side capacity is dedicated to just this function.
  • There are significant commercial situations in which a ring master may be required to provide this kind of drop-side access while still acting as a ring master.
  • One possible solution to the problem is to provide a fifth port on the ring master, dedicated to the same role as the drop-side port in the slave multiplex. This would result in there being three drop-side ports on the ring master.
  • Such an arrangement suffers from the disadvantage that switches are commonly constructed from elements with an even number of ports, usually a power of 4, so that large switches can be constructed by a simple inter-connection of a number of such elements. For commonality across a range of products, the switching element in an add-drop multiplex should follow this rule also.
  • An uneconomic alternative to providing a fifth port is to use two add-drop multiplexes at the ring master location, one being the ring master and the other being a slave multiplex. A better scheme is to construct a 6-port switch from a pair of 4-port elements inside the same add-drop multiplex, but this is again unattractive because it involves replicating one of the potentially most expensive elements in the add-drop multiplex in order to gain an increase in port capacity, and this increase is then wastefully large.
  • A more economic solution can be provided by taking advantage of a further feature which an add-drop multiplex may be required to provide. This feature is consolidation. It arises because traffic streams accessed on the drop-side ports may be only partially filled with traffic. Since the total drop-side capacity of a slave multiplex is commonly equal to the "through" capacity of the multiplex, any partial filling of the tributaries on the drop side represents lost capacity for access.
  • To overcome this problem, at least one network operator has proposed that add-drop multiplexes be fitted with an excess of tributary port capacity, larger possibly than the "through" capacity. The concept is that some internal concentration will be applied so as to pack the through path more efficiently than the partly loaded tributaries, the multiplex selectively accessing only those time slots which are loaded with traffic.
  • The invention lies in providing the interchange or matrix switch with an extra pair of interconnected buses. This is shown in Figure 4. In this figure a 4-port matrix switch 30 occupies the position of the switch 5 in Figure 2 and also acts as a ring master. The drop side of switch 30 has buses 31, 32 connected to a pair of respective time slot assignment function circuits 33, 34; there being one time slot assignment function circuit for each direction of traffic. The time slot assignment function circuits each have access to all the drop-side capacity of switch 30 and each of the tributary ports can be allocated a share of the total bus capacity. The new buses are indicated at 35. Each timeslot assignment function now has the ability to allocate capacity on any bus (three for one direction of traffic, three for the other). The purpose of the new buses 35 is to transfer traffic between the add and drop functions, allowing traffic entering or leaving on one tributary, not only to enter or leave via the link side, but alternatively to do so via another tributary. This is a function normally reserved to a cross-connect and considered inappropriate in an add-drop multiplex, as described in paragraph c) earlier in this specification.
  • In this case however, the extra facility allows possible lower rate tributaries serving local circuits, to be connected either to the "through" path or to the high bit rate tributaries connected to the network, i.e. the facility of a slave multiplex is provided. If not all of the traffic on the link side is to be connected to the network, possibly because it is connected to circulate on the ring, then traffic capacity inherently becomes free on the buses, allowing the local tributaries to access that capacity and connect to the network via the high bit rate tributaries. The described arrangement provides the function of a fifth port, within the inherent capacity limitations of the add-drop multiplex, and with greater economy of circuits and devices than known alternatives.

Claims (3)

  1. An add/drop multiplex comprising a matrix switch (30) the drop side of which is connected via buses (31, 32) to respective time slot assignment function circuits (33, 34) and characterised in that the time slot assignment function circuits (33, 34) are interconnected by at least one bus (35) capable of relieving the load on the matrix switch (30) and of transferring traffic in one direction only from the add to the drop functions of the multiplex, the bus (35) providing interconnectivity between tributaries.
  2. An add/drop multiplex as claimed in Claim 1, further characterised in that the matrix switch (30) acts as a ring master.
  3. An add/drop multiplex as claimed in Claim 1 or Claim 2, further characterised in that the time slot assignment function circuits have access to all the drop-side capacity of the matrix switch (30) and each of the tributary ports can be allocated a share of the total bus capacity.
EP91906166A 1990-03-14 1991-03-14 Switch for multiplexes Revoked EP0472700B1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB9005723 1990-03-14
GB909005723A GB9005723D0 (en) 1990-03-14 1990-03-14 Switch for multiplexes
PCT/GB1991/000396 WO1991014318A1 (en) 1990-03-14 1991-03-14 Switch for multiplexes

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0472700A1 EP0472700A1 (en) 1992-03-04
EP0472700B1 true EP0472700B1 (en) 1995-05-17

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EP91906166A Revoked EP0472700B1 (en) 1990-03-14 1991-03-14 Switch for multiplexes

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US (1) US5283785A (en)
EP (1) EP0472700B1 (en)
JP (1) JPH05502356A (en)
AT (1) ATE122832T1 (en)
AU (1) AU635126B2 (en)
CA (1) CA2058298A1 (en)
DE (1) DE69109775T2 (en)
DK (1) DK0472700T3 (en)
ES (1) ES2071991T3 (en)
FI (1) FI915358A0 (en)
GB (2) GB9005723D0 (en)
WO (1) WO1991014318A1 (en)

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US5301057A (en) * 1990-10-15 1994-04-05 Dsc Communications Corporation Subscriber interface for a fiber optic communications terminal
GB2253973B (en) * 1991-03-22 1995-06-07 Plessey Telecomm Multiplex data ring transmission
GB9127116D0 (en) * 1991-12-20 1992-02-19 Jahromi Fazlollah R Interconnecting communications networks
EP0603444A1 (en) * 1992-12-22 1994-06-29 International Business Machines Corporation Token star switch
GB2283884B (en) * 1993-11-10 1998-12-16 Fujitsu Ltd Add/drop multiplexer apparatus
GB9401430D0 (en) * 1994-01-26 1994-03-23 Plessey Telecomm Switching system for a telecommunications system
JPH07303088A (en) * 1994-05-10 1995-11-14 Hitachi Ltd Add-drop multiplexer
US5493565A (en) * 1994-08-10 1996-02-20 Dsc Communications Corporation Grooming device for streamlining a plurality of input signal lines into a grouped set of output signals
US6088371A (en) * 1995-04-05 2000-07-11 Hitachi, Ltd. Up-grading method for transmission apparatus
JP3039347B2 (en) * 1995-12-27 2000-05-08 日立電線株式会社 Optical component with switching function and waveguide filter used for the same
US6456596B2 (en) * 1996-07-23 2002-09-24 Marconi Communications Limited Synchronous transmission systems
US6298038B1 (en) * 1997-04-24 2001-10-02 Nortel Networks Limited Transparent transport
US5959986A (en) * 1997-09-30 1999-09-28 Alcatel Network Systems, Inc. Lightwave transmission telecommunications system employing a stacked matrix architecture
JP3364440B2 (en) * 1998-11-30 2003-01-08 富士通株式会社 SDH transmission equipment
GB2353174B (en) * 1999-08-09 2003-09-10 Mitel Corp Inverse multiplexer
US7280549B2 (en) * 2001-07-09 2007-10-09 Micron Technology, Inc. High speed ring/bus
CN101711036B (en) * 2009-11-17 2014-04-09 中兴通讯股份有限公司 Multi-sample monitoring system for system reliability verification of wireless transceiver system and method thereof

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4434485A (en) * 1980-11-13 1984-02-28 Rockwell International Corporation Drop and insert channel bank with reduced channel units
US4468767A (en) * 1981-12-07 1984-08-28 Coastcom Drop-and-insert multiplex digital communications system
ES2005838A6 (en) * 1986-11-18 1989-04-01 Alcatel Standard Electrica Insertador-segregador de canales in a digital via (Machine-translation by Google Translate, not legally binding)
JPS6460035A (en) * 1987-08-31 1989-03-07 Fujitsu Ltd Branching/inserting circuit
JP2564375B2 (en) * 1988-09-28 1996-12-18 株式会社日立製作所 Drop-and-drop multiplexer

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
ES2071991T3 (en) 1995-07-01
AU635126B2 (en) 1993-03-11
DK0472700T3 (en) 1995-07-10
AU7470091A (en) 1991-10-10
DE69109775T2 (en) 1995-09-21
CA2058298A1 (en) 1991-09-15
US5283785A (en) 1994-02-01
ATE122832T1 (en) 1995-06-15
FI915358A0 (en) 1991-11-13
WO1991014318A1 (en) 1991-09-19
DE69109775D1 (en) 1995-06-22
EP0472700A1 (en) 1992-03-04
GB2242103A (en) 1991-09-18
GB2242103B (en) 1994-06-08
GB9005723D0 (en) 1990-05-09
JPH05502356A (en) 1993-04-22
GB9105408D0 (en) 1991-05-01

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